Famous Quotes & Sayings

Yearbook Ad Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 7 famous quotes about Yearbook Ad with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Yearbook Ad Quotes

Yearbook Ad Quotes By Andre Leon Talley

I think it's important that models be healthy. — Andre Leon Talley

Yearbook Ad Quotes By John Zande

In the case of a single nineteen year old infantry soldier mangled in the devastating blast of a carefully laid roadside bomb, some fifty or even sixty years of exigent torment - some 500,000 hours of constant, inescapable misery - has been created out of virtually nothing, far exceeding the total output of brutal (albeit dazzling) terror felt by another less fortunate soldier in the seconds before his body is irreparably torn apart by shrapnel and his life is extinguished on a poorly defined battlefield, his account closed forever. — John Zande

Yearbook Ad Quotes By Mark Hanna

When women reach the age of maturity, Mother Nature sometimes overworks their frustration to the point of irrationalism. Like themiddle-aged man ... who finds himself looking longingly at a girl in her early twenties. — Mark Hanna

Yearbook Ad Quotes By Norman Mailer

The book was sloppily written in many parts (the words came too quickly and too easily) and there was hardly a noun in any sentence that was not holding hands with the nearest and most commonly available adjective - scalding coffee and tremulous fear are the sorts of thing you will find throughout. Over-certified adjectives are the mark of most best-seller writing. — Norman Mailer

Yearbook Ad Quotes By George Foreman

The integration of a headgear in professional boxing would do so much to make it safer for young men. They could go into the sport, make a lot of money and then come out and be good grandfathers. — George Foreman

Yearbook Ad Quotes By Charles Dickens

People like us don't go out at night cause people like them see us for what we are — Charles Dickens

Yearbook Ad Quotes By Marcel Proust

The whole art of living is to regard people who cause us suffering as, in a degree, enabling us to accept its divine form and thus to populate our daily life with divinities. — Marcel Proust